A half-dozen governments in Central Asia and Latin American have purchased the System for Operative Investigative Activities (SORM) wiretapping technology from Russian providers, expanding their — and potentially Russian intelligence's — ability to intercept communications.
The technology includes monitoring equipment placed inside a telecommunications provider's facility, which delivers information to the client government's intelligence agency, including mobile numbers, phones identifiers, geolocation, names, email addresses, and IP addresses. That's according to threat intelligence firm Recorded Future, which found in an analysis that the former Soviet territories of Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan, and the Latin American nations of Cuba and Nicaragua, have very likely acquired the technology to wiretap citizens.